Parliamentary Elections 18 September 2016 Russian Federation

Parliamentary Elections 18 September 2016 Russian Federation

Parliamentary Elections 18 September 2016 Russian Federation REGISTRATION OF POLITICAL PARTIES AND CANDIDATES FOR THE 2016 ELECTION TO THE STATE DUMA OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION SUMMARY 74 parties had the formal right to nominate candidates for the election of deputies to the State Duma in 2016. However, only one-third of those parties attempted to take part in the 2016 State Duma elections because the Russian electoral system combines excessive demands on the number of signatures necessary for candidate registration with extremely rigid requirements for their inspection. As a result, out of parties without registration exemption, only the following nominated their candidates to the State Duma of the Russian Federation: 1. "Union of Labor" 2. "Native Party" 3. "Revival of Agrarian Russia" (only district candidates) 4. "Revival of the Villages" (only district candidates) 5. "Party of the Parents of the Future" (only district candidates) 6. "Will" 7. "Great Fatherland" 8. "Party of Social Reform" However, all 14 parties with registration exemption nominated their candidates: 1. "United Russia" 2. Communist Party 3. Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR) 4. "Just Russia" 5. Russian United Democratic Party "Yabloko" 6. "Civic Platform" 7. "Civilian Power" (a possible merger with the Communist Party of Social Justice (CPSJ) and a change of name to CPSJ was announced but did not occur) 8. Communist Party "Communists of Russia" 9. People's Freedom Party ("PARNAS") 10. "Patriots of Russia" 11. "Party of Growth" (formerly called "Right Cause") 12. "Rodina" 13. "Russian Party of Pensioners for Justice" 14. Russian Ecological Party "The Greens" As a result, the number of parties participating in the nomination stage in these elections was lower than in the State Duma elections of 1993, 1995, 1999, and 2003, but higher than in the elections of 2007 and 2011. Moreover, after the initial candidate list validation, the number of participating parties went down, and the number will most likely further decrease after the end of the registration process. August 3 is the deadline for political parties to submit signatures to the Central Election Commission (CEC); the Commission then has 10 days to make a decision on whether or not to register the party. Almost all parties that do not participate in the elections thus doom themselves to liquidation in 2019-2020. Therefore, for the majority of parties, participation in the upcoming elections to the State Duma is the most viable opportunity to save their parties. I. PROBLEMS FACING PARTIES DURING THE NOMINATION OF FEDERAL CANDIDATE LISTS 1. Number of signatures collected. The law requires that parties collect at least 200,000 signatures, with no single region of the Russian Federation providing more than 7,000. This entails collecting signatures in at least 29 regions. The number of submitted signatures may exceed the minimum required number of 200,000 by not more than 5%. 2. Quality requirements for signature sheets. In 2003, the acceptable percentage of rejected (spoilt) signatures was 25%. In 2005, this figure was sharply reduced to 5%. The maximum number of signatures over the required limit was similarly reduced from 25% to 5%. 3. Requirement to notarize data on signature collectors and their signatures. Until 2005, legislation did not contain such a requirement. Now, it imposes an additional financial burden on political parties and increases the time needed to collect signatures and submit signature sheets. 4. Season of signature collection. All the previous State Duma elections took place in December, and consequently the signature collection happened in September-October, when it is generally not yet cold and most of the voters are domiciled at their place of residence. Because the 2016 elections are taking place in September, signature collection had to occur in July, when a significant part of the electorate is not staying at their permanent residence address (TN: many Russian citizens have summer houses where they spend most of the summer months). The Presidential Decree of June 17, 2016, scheduled the 2016 elections only 92 days before Election Day. Had the President announced the elections at the earliest legally possible moment, on May 30, parties with no registration exemption would have had 66 instead of the current 26 days to collect signatures. This means a loss of 44 days for party registration. It is important to list the factors that have increased the time required to prepare candidate registration lists: 1. Increased number of documents to be submitted for each nominated candidate. 2. Introduction of a required minimum number of candidates on the list. This is a new separate rule for the State Duma elections. The current law requires parties to list at least 200 candidates. This requirement is absolutely excessive: during four campaigns conducted under a mixed system, no party received more than 120 seats, and no party that won second place ever got more than 64 seats. Moreover, there are several "small" parties aiming only to overcome the 5% barrier, which is extremely far away from 200 seats. Thus, especially for novice parties, the vast number of documents that must be submitted for each candidate and the excessive requirement of the minimum number of candidates on the list significantly increase the time needed to prepare the documents for candidate list validation. II. CANDIDATE NOMINATION IN SINGLE-MEMBER DISTRICTS All single-member district candidates can be divided into the following categories: • Candidates from political parties with registration exemption – these candidates do not have to collect voter signatures; • Candidates from political parties that do not have an exemption – these candidates have to collect signatures; • Self-nominated candidates – they candidates also have to collect signatures. In single-member districts, candidates of parties without registration exemption as well as self-nominees have to collect signatures of at least 3% of the district’s voters. In most districts that amounts to 13,000-15,000 signatures. The inadequately inflated requirement of collecting signatures from 3% of district voters is the most stringent requirement for candidate registration through signature collection in the country’s recent history. Until now the requirement was only 1%. The requirement of collecting signatures of 3% of voters is a restrictive measure for candidates from political parties that do not have an exemption as well as for self-nominated candidates. Such a situation turns candidate registration into a manually controlled "political decision". There are currently 2,188 single-member candidates on the certified list, but only 57 of them are from political parties that do not have an exemption. According to the CEC, 304 candidates have conducted self-nomination. Therefore, as of July 29, there were 2,418 single-member candidates on the certified list It is interesting to compare this data with data from previous elections. We see a sharp decline in the number of self-nominated candidates compared to the elections of 1999 and 2003, which is not surprising as these candidates are currently in a highly unfavorable position compared to candidates from parties with exemptions. III. FEATURES OF NOMINATION AND COMPOSITION OF INDIVIDUAL POLITICAL PARTY LISTS 1. Party list continuity It is interesting to compare party list composition today and five years ago for the 7 parties that also participated in the elections to the State Duma in 2011. For simplicity and clarity, we will compare mainly the central part of the list. The lists of the Communist Party and the Liberal Democratic Party display the greatest continuity. There is much less continuity in the lists of "Patriots of Russia", RUDP "Yabloko," and "Just Russia". This time the "Just Russia" party has nominated only one candidate, S. M. Mironov, who is on both lists. He was the head of the party list in 2011. It is more difficult to evaluate the continuity of the "United Russia" list; during both elections there was just one candidate in the central part of the list – Dmitry Medvedev There is no evident continuity between now and 2011 in the lists of the "Right Cause" party and the "Party of Growth" (renamed "Right Cause"). Not a single candidate from the central part of the list of the "Right Cause" (10 people) is on the "Party of Growth" list. On the other hand, the list of the "Party of Growth" includes candidates that were on the lists of the "Union of Right Forces" (Nechayev, Khakamada, Nadezhdin, Ginzburg, Pohmelkin, and Solskiy); "Yabloko" (Resnick); and "Civilian Power" (Fedulov and Pohmelkin); as well as two deputies of the State Duma of the first convocation (Stankevich and Starikov) and one from "Civic Platform" (Sidnev). There are 10 candidates in the central part of the "Rodina" party list. None of them was on the 2003 list. In the central part of the list of the PARNAS party, there are some candidates from the 2007 "Union of Right Forces" list (Schneider and Kataev). From the other six parties it is interesting to look at the "Civic Platform": its list leader Shaikhutdinov was elected to the State Duma on the LDPR list in 2007. 2. "United Russia" Just as in the past and contrary to its public statements, the party continues to apply the "electoral locomotive" strategy (adding popular persons as candidates to the party list who serve as campaign supporters but do not necessarily aim to be elected, i.e. due to the fact that their occupy high profile posts), although less so than during the elections of 2003-2011. The party list includes 19 heads of regions — 9 governors and 10 heads of republics. Only 162 current State Duma deputies from "United Russia" (out of the total 238) were included in the party lists or are running in single-member districts. Given that not all of them will be elected, at least a third of the current deputies will probably not get into the next Duma.

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